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Twice a year the Knob Creek Gun Range in West Point, Kentucky, holds the largest machine gun shoot and gun convention in the world. Gun dealers, collectors, and enthusiasts from all over the ...
Knob Creek Gun Range; Firearms Control Regulations Act of 1975; District of Columbia v. Heller; KGP-9; Charles Upham Memorial Cavalry Champions Belt; Rifle 7.62mm 2A1; Sumitomo NTK-62; David Lloyd (riflemaker and sportsman) Delacre machine pistol; Coach gun; MCEM 1 Submachine gun; Sharps Rifle Manufacturing Company; Firearms licence; Lupara ...
Knob Creek Single Barrel Reserve: a 120 proof (60% ABV) single barrel bourbon, aged 9 years. [6] Knob Creek Single Barrel Select: a 120 proof (60% ABV) single barrel bourbon, part of Jim Beam's private barrel pick program for retailers. [6] Knob Creek Rye: a 100 proof (50% ABV) straight rye whiskey bearing the Knob Creek name was released in ...
Wheatland is the common name for a house built in 1838 Knob Creek Historic District, near present-day Johnson City.Also known as the William P. Reeves House or the Clark House, the house was built by William Pouder Reeves and his brother Peter Miller Reeves on 400 acres (1.6 km 2), purchased for $5500.
Dukedom is connected with General Nathan Bedford Forrest, who served for the Confederacy in the Civil War.A Kentucky highway historical marker in the community reads: CSA Gen. N. B. Forrest with main body of cavalry passed this way before and after destructive raid on Paducah, March 25, 1864.
Knob Creek Farm, boyhood home of Abraham Lincoln, in LaRue County, US Knob Creek (bourbon) , a brand of bourbon whiskey made by Beam Suntory Topics referred to by the same term
Any good article on any subject would include the "who, what, why, when and where." So, when did Knob Creek Bourbon first come on the market? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 74.196.127.243 21:03, 27 December 2009 (UTC) This review says it was introduced in 1992 (but this article is currently locked) - "Knob Creek Bourbon".
The total acreage of Knob Creek Farm is 228 acres (92 ha), of which the Lincolns lived on 30 acres (12 ha). Lincoln's father, Thomas Lincoln, leased the land by the Old Cumberland Trail (now U.S. 31E) in hopes of regaining the Sinking Spring Farm, where Lincoln was born. [6] At the Knob Creek home, Lincoln's brother, Thomas, was born and died.